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Archive for the ‘Wolves in college’ Category

I stand corrected.

There is no gold that matches the gold that is a Hunter Hammer picture.

Without him, this blog would be pointless. Thankfully, we got him. And, thankfully, he’s got a sense of humor about this whole thing.

So bow down, Wolf Nation, to the once, current and future Page Hit King.

It’s Hammer Time!!

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A picture so intense you can never use it too many times.

Slowed down by a nasty cold that had prevented him from training the past two days, Tyler King was not at his best Saturday.

Running at the Bill Dellinger Cross Country Invitational in Springfield, Oregon, the University of Washington red-shirt freshman finished 72nd out of 101 runners in a time of 25 minutes, 39 seconds.

The former Wolf star had been questionable before the start of the race due to his health issues, and he had little gas with which to chase the race leaders. Senior Trevor Dunbar of Oregon won the race in 23:38.

King’s next race won’t be until Friday, Oct. 12, when he and his Husky teammates will travel to Madison, Wisconsin for the Adidas Invitational. Also expected to show at that meet, the 4th ranked team in the nation — the University of Oklahoma — which features Tyler’s older brother, red-shirt senior Kyle King.

It will be the first time the Kings have faced off at the college level. Time for … MORTAL KOMBAT!!!!!

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These are the people you need to call once in a while, Dalton Engle.

MaryAnne and Mike Engle have a unique view on college football this season, as their son, Dalton Engle (and wife Amy), son-in-law Tim Walstad (and wife Erin) and “honorary Engle,” Mitch Pelroy have all left Coupeville for the brave new world of Montana and the chance to play ball for Montana Western University.

These are the words of Momma and Padre Engle, as we take that journey with them this year.

Time for another update from Dillon, Montana from the Gridiron Padre.

I made the trip the first of September to deliver a working vehicle and bring back a broken one. One of those interesting things that happened on the first trip over moving the kids to Montana.

This time Mary Ann couldn’t go, so Mark and Hunter Hammer made it a guys road trip… fun people to travel with, which may just be the next blog.

All three of our Coupeville boys are red shirted, and spend Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Thursdays scrimmaging on the defensive practice squad. That means they are going up against the first and second string offense which is where the six foot six, 350lbs plus linemen happen to be, and for a defensive lineman (Tim Walstad) and middle linebacker (Dalton Engle) that means you’re in the mix for half the repetitions. So much for getting faster, stronger and smarter for the first year.

When we left in August Tim had a strained shoulder, and when Tim’s parents showed up at the end of two weeks of two-a-days he had passed out on the field. I guess the flu bug bit him bad. I even heard he passed out on a trainer later as well, maybe that is how he got to know him so well and is a Teachers Assistant for him in a CPR and First Aid class.

The day we showed up, September 6th, Tim had been diagnosed with a concussion from practice that day. He wasn’t permitted to practice the week we were there.

We watched a couple of practices where we saw Dalton and Mitch Pelroy. The interesting thing is they were actually playing smarter and harder than two weeks before. More engaged, more educated and aggressive. I’m concluding that’s why Tim was getting more beat up … he was getting better as well.

I asked Dalton what the difference was and he said I want to get the scout team player of the week. I laughed and asked if he was serious, in which he said yes with a semi serious look on his face. Come to find out they were all trying to win that title.

So here’s the thing. As a parent and a football guy the difference between “what did I get myself into?” and “I’m going after the scout team player of the week” is maturity, or growth.

As a football guy I was ecstatic to see them take a more active part in football at the college level and engage in the next level of such a tough game. As a parent I was more excited to see their reference point change because that’s what parents desire to see in their kids. Growth means transitioning from what is comfortable to participating in what isn’t.

Or, to quote the sign I spotted in the tourist shop in St Regis, MT — “Life begins where our comfort zone ends”.

The next thing Dalton said was “my goal for next season is (I almost stopped listening because he had already planned on coming back for a second season) to make second team and the travel squad”.

A huge leap from “what did I get myself into?” Imagine the growth that will take place throughout the rest of the year. My football guy side doesn’t like to admit this, but this isn’t really about football. Although football will accelerate the new reference points, this is about growth and it’s about embracing the adventure and making new friends and figuring out the future.

Amy found the perfect job, which Erin is trying not to resent her for, but it was the perfect job for Amy. Amy’s dad has always called her “sparky”. The bbq/burger/delicious comfort food restaurant she works in is called “Sparky’s Garage.”

It’s a good thing Dalton married Amy or his momma would never know if he was alive and doing well or not. The threat of turning off his cellular device, helped with at least the making of one phone call. So if you happen to talk to Dalton, tell him to call his mom.

Erin has made her own progress by finding a job, hated the job, resigning and then found two more part time jobs.

When we talk to Erin, which I’m happy to say is often, you might think we dropped her off in a remote village where she is being forced to survive indefinitely.

The best part about giving Erin advice is that she is intelligent and already knows what we are going to tell her. We told her to make friends with the indigenous people of the area and to learn their language.

She said “this place is weird. This guy gave me a dirty look when I didn’t wave back at him at the intersection.”

Sounds like she’s up against a huge challenge. All those cowboy hats, wranglers and boots. All those pick ups pulling horse trailers. The people in Dillon are extremely friendly. We didn’t go anywhere that we didn’t strike up a conversation that might of lasted for longer had it not been in line at Ace Hardware.

Erin will be venturing into pizza delivery by night and working at Wells Fargo in this village by day, where she will be learning the language and meeting many of the indigenous people. Forced growth but growth all the same. Maybe she’ll learn how to use a boomerang or play a didgeridoo?

The girls have found some salvation from the remote village by locating a Target, a Costco and a movie theater in Bozeman, an hour and forty five minutes away and a Wal-Mart, and small shopping mall an hour away in Butte, MT.

At least for the boys there is the hunting and fishing. Acquiring fly poles and exploring the best fishing rivers in the nation. I for one am looking forward to joining this new found treasure chest of out door manliness.  As for what they are going to do on the weekends … shopping or fishing ?  

Next story … the adventures of traveling with David Svien’s favorite subjects, The Hammers!!!

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The man, the myth, the legend … Kyle King.

“Kyle King”

Now this is confusing.

As I was perusing the results from yesterday’s Virginia/Panorama Farms Invitational — a cross country race that featured three of the nation’s top 25 college teams, including No. 4 Oklahoma, which won easily — I saw what I thought was a typo.

The results had Kyle King finishing 13th and 14th in the race, with the only difference being that one Kyle King was supposedly running for the University of Virginia, while the other one competed for the meet-winning Sooners.

Knowing that former Coupeville High School legend Kyle King was wrapping up his college running days in Norman, Oklahoma, I was of two minds. Either the stats guy had slipped up or the man, the myth, the legend who would run shirtless in the snow on Whidbey, was so fast he had run the race twice, finishing mere seconds behind himself, possibly busting the space time continuum.

It wasn’t to be, however, as a little research (and I do mean little — this is a sports blog, not “60 Minutes”) revealed the existence of another cross country runner with the exact same moniker of Kyle King.

How dare he lay claim to the name of a Coupeville sports god?!?!?

According to my “research,” the imposter Kyle King won five state titles in high school (the same as the real Kyle King). His favorite movie is “The Fighter.” (Not bad.) His favorite magazine is “Runners World” (Predictable, but OK.) And his favorite band is Blink-182 (Apparently they’re tone deaf in Virginia…)

Frankly, I only see one way to settle this. A head-to-head race for the right to be the one and only Kyle King, Cross Country Stud. And no, yesterday’s race doesn’t count, since our Kyle King was running under his coach’s game plan to have the OU runners stay in a tight pack and not break apart for any reason, the better to hide the Sooners true strengths until later in the season.

But there is going to come a time and a place when the two must face off and this must be settled once and for all. For in the words of “Highlander,” that most sainted of ’80s classic cinema cheese, “There can only be one!!!”

And his name will be Kyle King!!

Yeah, I’m sort of hedging my bets here…

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From eastern Washington snow to Oklahoma heat to the hills of Virginia, nothing slows down Kyle King.

It’s official. Kyle King is a certified, Grade-A stud.

After three very impressive seasons running cross country and track at Eastern Washington University, King reached a whole new level Saturday. Running his first race for the University of Oklahoma, the fourth-ranked cross country squad in the entire nation, the former Wolf tasted the elite level of his sport.

A five-time state track champ during his days at Coupeville High School, the fifth-year senior debuted as a Sooner at the Virginia/Panorama Farms Invitational in Earlysville, Virginia. Using a strategy of having one runner make a play for the top spot, while the remainder of the Sooner squad ran as a tight pack, Oklahoma dominated, thrashing nine other teams, including two other ranked squads in No. 21 Michigan and No. 22 Arkansas.

King finished 14th out of 87 runners, covering an 8K course in 24 minutes, 32.6 seconds. He and his pack picked up the pace at every mark, with King vaulting from 26th at the two-mile mark to 18th at the 5K mark to his final spot, mashed into a group running as one.

Kemoy Campbell of Arkansas took the race in 24:04.7, narrowly edging out Oklahoma’s Bill Kogel.

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